Utopia
Utopia [1] is a name for an imaginary community or society with a perfect system of laws and politics.[2]
Sir Thomas More invented the word for his 1516 book Utopia. The book was about a fictional island in the southern Atlantic Ocean. The word has been used to describe both a perfect society, and societies in literature. A related idea is dystopia, the opposite of a dystopia.
There have been many utopias based on politics, economics, religion, ecology. Some of these have been propagated in books and pamphlets, some as actual communities. In practice, attempts to create utopias seem doomed, as good intentions run against problems. Most of the literary utopias are actually satires of existing societies. There were several attempts to create such perfect societies (they did not work). The word utopia can also refer to a society of such an attempt.
Utopia is Greek for no place; related words include eutopia, meaning good place in Greek, paradise, Shangra La and Xanadu.
The ideas Christians, Jews and Muslims have of the Garden of Eden, and of Heaven can be seen as such utopias.
Literature examples
change- Plato's Republic by Plato (~380 BCE) is one of the earliest conceptions of a utopia.
- The City of God by Augustine of Hippo, (413–426 AD) describes an ideal city, the "eternal" Jerusalem, the archetype of all Christian utopias.
- New Atlantis by Francis Bacon (1627).
- Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift (1726), a satire on human nature and on 'travellers tales'.
- Erewhon by Samuel Butler (1872), a satirical utopia.
- News from Nowhere by William Morris (1892). Nowhere: a place without politics, a future society based on common ownership and democratic control of the means of production.[3]
- A Modern Utopia by H. G. Wells (1905)
References
change- ↑ pronounced /juːˈtoʊpiə/
- ↑ More, Thomas (1 April 2000). Morley, Henry (ed.). Utopia – via Project Gutenberg.
- ↑ Morris, William (2006) [1903]. The Earthly Paradise. Obscure Press. ISBN 1846645239.